Anish Kapoor
13 October – 18 November 2006

“I have always been interested in how one can look again for that very first moment
of creativity where everything is possible and nothing has actually happened.” - Anish
Kapoor

Lisson Gallery announces a new exhibition of seven new large-scale sculptures
by Anish Kapoor opening 12th October, comprising the most ambitious Lisson
show the artist has undertaken in his 25-year history with the gallery. This show
marks the first time one artist has made a single exhibition using all available
gallery spaces.

Renowned for his enigmatic sculptural forms, this exciting new body of work
finds Kapoor continuing his exploration of metaphysical polarities: presence and
absence, being and non-being, place and non-place, the solid versus the
intangible. Further to his ongoing concerns with human presence and perception,
Kapoor investigates the ephemeral nature of sight, and examines the role of the
psyche in our interpretation of visual stimuli.

In each of Lisson Gallery spaces the artist will exhibit a different aspect of his
work. In the main gallery, a wall slowly moves through the space describing a
blood red hemisphere. This “proto-object” of pure colour is formed by the
movement of the wall. In another room a 12m mirrored arc plays with light and
reflection creating such physical tension that the viewer feels at a crossroads
between the real and the unreal. Elsewhere, the glistening surface and seductive
void of an opalescent “pocket piece” suggest myths of origin or, in the words of
cultural critic Homi K. Bhabha, “ excessive engendering emptiness.”

Kapoor will also be unveiling collaboration with author Salman Rushdie. Though
Kapoor is known for his collaborative projects with other celebrated cultural
figures, this is his first project with a writer and also marks the first time that he
has worked with text. This sculpture is the culmination of a 20-year dialogue
between the two, ultimately conceived during a series of visits Rushdie made to
the artist’s studio. This dialogue resulted in a mesmeric sculpture consisting of
two bronze boxes conjoined with red wax and inscribed around the outside
with the first two paragraphs of Rushdie’s text; “Blood Relations, or an
Interrogation of the Arabian Nights”.

“I’ve responded very strongly to the sensuality of Anish’s forms and to his ability
to remain lyrical even when he works on an immense scale” says Rushdie:

“we share a strong interest in the continuing power of myth, and [his] forms, though they
clearly belong to his own universe of shape, arise out of an interest, very similar to my own, in
the physicality of the body and the existing world of phenomena.”

Finally, Kapoor will devote one room in the gallery to the maquettes of critically
acclaimed public commissions including Marsyas, Tate Modern Turbine Hall,
2002 and Cloud Gate, Millennium Park, Chicago, 2004, and the Monte
Sant’Angelo underground stations in Naples with Future Systems.